The die is also scored along the fold lines, allowing for several depths of spine.

Plus the die has an indented space to hold any small magnetic die shape with which

to cut a window in the cover, if you wish.

After die-cutting my cover from matboard,

I cut a piece of wallpaper large enough to wrap the outside of the cover,

gluing the wallpaper around to the inside for finished edges.

Wallpaper is a fun book cover because it is so pliable.

For the end paper, I die-cut and trimmed down a piece of patterned card stock,

then glued it in place to secure (and hide) the wallpaper edges.

The cover then folds easily along the pre-scored lines.

Since I wanted a thicker album, I folded on the two end score lines to make a deeper spine.

Next, using the same die and a collection of patterned scrapbook papers and

smooth white bristol paper,

I die-cut the pages for the mini-album.

To do this, start with papers cut to measure approx 6×12″, then fold each one in half

and place the fold along the appropriate score line on the die

(depending on the size spine you’ve chosen).

Be careful to place the fold just to one side of the score line, so the fold stays uncut.

For this album, I die-cut 16 papers for 8 signatures of 2 pages each.

For neatness, I die-cut an extra page the same size as the album,

folding it to match the spine, and used it to enclose the signatures.

To attach the die-cut signatures to the album cover,

I threaded lengths of thick baker’s twine through each signature

and tied them along the spine. So easy and colorful!

And I can still untie and rearrange the pages as I fill them.

To decorate the cover, I collaged a few scraps of paper,

punched a hole with my Crop-a-Dile, and inserted a Tim Holtz knob.

The inside title page is white bristol paper on which I lightly gel-transferred

some blue sky in a couple wispy layers, yellow numbers to simulate the sun,plus some random areas of type,

all torn a bit haphazardly from some handy Time magazine pages,

then wrote the month, drew a little bird, and added my initial on a Dennison label.

During these last few weeks of studio construction,

I hope to fill the pages of my new mini-album with quotes of encouragement

and thoughts of patience,

as I anticipate building my creative “nest” in my new space.

Hope you are enjoying a lovely month of June!

EDIT:

This hot afternoon (25th) included some waiting time in the car, so I came prepared for a quick doodle in my new journal. Here’s my encouraging reminder for the rest of June, including a serendipitous water-drip emphasis from my Starbucks iced tea cup.

Eileen Hull-Pam, I love your album- great tutorial and love how you will fill it with notes about your new beautiful space! Arrived home and now catching up on the latest. I am hoping the studio is close to being done? We need to get together so I can catch up on what all is happening here!ReplyCancel

Kimberly Ylitalo-I love your mini album, Pamela Jane 🙂 Just got a real treat and attended the mini-album class at Mary’s Scrapden in Evansville, IN. I have the die now and am excited to do some fun new album. Yours inspires me!!